This summer
I was able to tick something off of my goals list – completing a
triathlon. The problem is, that goal
gave me the motivation to get up and get out to train. Since July, my training schedule has gotten
really lax but, I recently decided that first triathlon was so fun I’m going to
do another! And that means getting my
rear in gear to get intentionally active again.
So this week, I headed back to the pool.
And it was miserable.
OK, maybe
miserable is an overstatement. But it
was really hard and it felt like I was starting all over again. I am clearly out of swimming shape and these
two months I took off may have seemed like a good idea in the moment but it
made me second guess my desire to do another triathlon. But I’m not going to quit. I’m going to get a coach, a plan and a race
date. And then I’m going to train.
As I was
struggling through the water after my ill-advised vacation from swimming I
thought about how we can experience the same thing in our spiritual lives. In the Bible, Paul refers to pursuing God as
a form of training and he uses physical training as a parallel (see 1 Timothy
4:7-8). Following Jesus is not
easy. Following Jesus is even harder
when it is something we occasionally dabble in or something we regularly take
vacations from. Maybe you have found you
took a break and are wanting to get “back in the game” but finding it
difficult. Here are some things that
will help you:
1.
Keep the
right goal in mind. Following Jesus
is not going to church. But going to
church is important in following Jesus.
Swimming laps is not doing a triathlon.
But doing a triathlon requires I swim laps. When you are trying to get up on Sunday to go
be with other people seeking to follow Jesus, it can be easy to roll over and
say “next week.” But the goal isn’t to
go to church, it is to follow Jesus. So,
the question of the day isn’t, “Am I going to go to church?” The question of the day is, “What am I going
to do to follow Jesus today?”
2.
Don’t do
it alone. Following Jesus is
hard. Following Jesus by ourselves is
impossible. We all need someone to
encourage, prod, challenge, love and strengthen us. One of the things that gets me up at 5:10 AM
to go swimming is I know I will get to see the smiling face of my friend Ron
Mellor and hear his encouraging words.
Are you a single mom? Spiritually
single woman/man? Widowed? Single?
Do you feel like you are going at it alone? Well, you are not alone – there are many
others like you. Ask someone to go to
church with you or to meet you there and go to the same service. It is NOT a sign of weakness, it is a sign of
strength. We all need each other and
you’re not the exception. Stop acting
like it, humble yourself and reach out.
3.
Practice,
practice, practice. This I know:
over the last 15 years I have spoken at least 2,000 times. And some of those sermons have been just
plain awful. There have been Sundays
where, after church, I’ve gone into my office and apologized to God. There have been workouts – runs, bikes and
swims – where I have just felt horrible.
Someone removed all the oxygen from the atmosphere, someone put lead
weights in my shoes, the weather was bad, it was too hot or it was too
cold. But you keep going. Because even the bad days can help you become
stronger. Every time you go to church or
read your Bible or spend time in prayer or help another person will not be the
best spiritual experience you have ever had.
But it will help strengthen you to follow Jesus.
So, if you are
struggling to follow Jesus, don’t give up.
Keep Jesus at the center, bring someone along and keep working on
it. I love what Paul says about this : “…work out your own salvation
with fear and trembling, for it is God who works in you, both to will and to
work for his good pleasure.” (Philippians 2:12–13, ESV) God meets us right where we are to complete
that which we long for but are unable to do ourselves.
You are loved.
David
“Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God. Consider him who endured from sinners such hostility against himself, so that you may not grow weary or fainthearted. In your struggle against sin you have not yet resisted to the point of shedding your blood.” (Hebrews 12:1–4, ESV)
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